The UK FCA outlined a new regulatory direction as autonomous AI rapidly reshapes retail financial services. The UK FCA said AI agents could soon manage financial decisions without constant human involvement. The report also identified tokenized money and stablecoins as possible settlement tools for automated financial systems.
The UK FCA released a 147-page report examining AI’s growing influence across retail financial markets. The report described a transition from human decisions toward continuous automated financial services. It also urged regulators to prepare for faster AI adoption across the financial sector.
Sheldon Mills led the review before leaving the regulator after eight years of service. He wrote, “The central shift is from human-led, episodic financial activity towards services that are AI-enabled, continuous and delegated.” The UK FCA said this transformation already exceeds previous regulatory expectations.
The report explained that modern AI systems now move beyond recommendations into direct decision-making. It noted that more than 20 frontier AI models have launched since late 2025. The FCA believes autonomous financial agents will become more common across consumer financial services.
The agency proposed seven recommendations to support responsible innovation and stronger oversight. One recommendation encourages trusted protocols that support agentic finance across regulated markets. Another recommendation expands the FCA AI Lab to support future financial system development.
UK FCA linked autonomous finance with programmable settlement infrastructure and faster transaction execution. The report said traditional banking systems cannot always match machine transaction speeds. Therefore, tokenized bank deposits and systemic stablecoins could support automated financial activity.
The review explained that programmable assets enable instant settlement between autonomous financial systems. These assets also reduce delays caused by traditional multi-day payment processes. The UK FCA said faster settlement could improve machine-driven portfolio and cash management.
The report also highlighted growing governance concerns surrounding autonomous financial decisions. Industry participants questioned how firms should assign responsibility when AI acts independently. One executive suggested the industry may require “a Turing test” to separate human intent from algorithmic behavior.
The UK FCA emphasized that governance must develop alongside increasingly capable AI systems. The regulator said firms remain responsible for decisions made through autonomous technology. The report also examined consumer confidence as AI gains greater financial authority.
Research cited by the UK FCA found that 20% of UK adults would allow AI to make financial decisions. That finding reflects growing public acceptance of automated financial management. However, the regulator expects firms to maintain strong oversight throughout AI deployment.
Emma Banymandhub, CEO of The Payments Association, welcomed the review and supported stronger governance standards.
Mills also reinforced personal responsibility for AI systems before the report’s publication. He told the Financial Times, “You need a human on the hook for what they’re doing.” The UK FCA plans to use these findings to shape future financial regulation.
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